For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RL33864 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ¢ ¢ Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress ¢ ¢ Trade promotion authority (TPA), formerly known as "fast-track" authority, is scheduled to expire July 1, 2007. With it will expire the authority: (a) that Congress grants the President to enter into certain trade agreements, and (b) for Congress to consider the agreements' implementing legislation under expedited procedures. Currently, the Administration is negotiating a number of trade agreements that may not be completed before the current TPA is set to expire. If these activities are to continue, TPA/fast-track renewal may be a central issue in the 110th Congress. Within the debate, a major issue is expected to be whether to include as a principal negotiating objective in trade agreements, "enforceable core labor standards." Two TPA/fast-track authorities have incorporated labor provisions. The first, the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 (OTCA), which expired in 1994, included the broad, general objective: "to promote worker rights." The North American Free Trade Agreement, with its labor side agreement, was negotiated under OTCA. The second and current TPA authority with labor provisions, the Trade Act of 2002, includes protections for labor, modified by protections for country governments, businesses and investors. Seven free trade agreements (FTAs)--with Chile, Singapore, Australia, Morocco, Bahrain, Oman, and the Dominican Republic and Central America--were negotiated under this authority. All have only one enforceable labor requirement: that each country not fail to enforce its own labor laws in a manner affecting trade between the parties. (In contrast to this, the U.S.-Jordan FTA, negotiated in 2000 and approved in 2001 without TPA/fast track authority, includes enforceable labor provisions.) Major options for labor provisions in renewed TPA/fast-track authority focus on whether principal negotiating objectives should include "enforceable core labor standards." Supporters argue that including these could help: (1) slow the offshoring of certain U.S. jobs; (2) protect foreign workers against exploitative corporate behavior; (3) support the ability of workers to share in the gains from international trade; and (4) fend off an international "race to the bottom" based on labor costs. Opponents argue that (1) core labor standards should be promoted by the International Labor Organization, not by trade agreements; (2) as countries develop, they adopt higher labor standards on their own; (3) stronger worker protections could discourage international investment; and (4) labor standards are disguised protectionism. History shows that with or without FTAs, trade will likely continue to grow. This report examines issues relating to TPA/fast-track labor provisions in the larger context of global labor issues. It: (1) identifies the players and their positions; (2) tracks the enforceable labor provisions in TPA/fast-track laws and the FTAs negotiated under them; (3) presents some legislative options for new TPA/fast-track labor provisions; and (4) sets out arguments for and against enforceable core labor standards. Finally, it looks at possible outcomes and implications of the various legislative options, and summarizes key activity on the TPA renewal issue. This report will be updated as events warrant. ¢ Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 Which Set of Core Labor Standards?........................................................................................ 2 Who Cares About Enforceable Core Labor Standards, and Why? .................................................. 3 Labor Advocates........................................................................................................................ 3 Business Groups........................................................................................................................ 3 Developing Countries................................................................................................................ 4 U.S. Executive Branch .............................................................................................................. 4 Key Labor Provisions in TPA/Fast-Track Laws and in Trade Agreements Negotiated under Them .................................................................................................................................. 5 Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988: NAFTA..................................................... 5 No TPA/Fast-Track Law: The Jordan Agreement ..................................................................... 5 Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002: Seven Trade Agreements ........................ 6 Legislative Options for TPA/Fast-Track Renewal........................................................................... 7 Option 1: No TPA/Fast-Track Renewal .................................................................................... 8 Option 2: TPA/Fast-Track Renewal with No Enforceable Labor Provisions............................ 8 Option 3: TPA/Fast-Track Labor Provisions Similar to Those under the Expiring Authority ................................................................................................................................ 8 Option 4: TPA/Fast-Track Labor Provisions Setting out Enforceable Core Labor Provisions as Principal Negotiating Objectives ..................................................................... 8 The 2001 Rangel Bill ...................................................................................................................... 8 Arguments For and Against Enforceable Core Labor Standards as a Principal Negotiating Objective ...................................................................................................................................... 9 General Arguments.................................................................................................................... 9 For Enforceable Core Labor Standards as a Principal Negotiating Objective .................... 9 Against .............................................................................................................................. 10 Arguments Related to U.S. Workers ........................................................................................11 For Enforceable Labor Standards as a Principal Negotiating Objective............................11 Against ...............................................................................................................................11 Arguments Related to Foreign Workers ...................................................................................11 For Enforceable Labor Standards as a Principal Negotiating Objective............................11 Against ...............................................................................................................................11 Sovereignty Issues................................................................................................................... 12 For Enforceable Core Labor Standards as a Principal Negotiating Objective .................. 12 Against .............................................................................................................................. 12 Arguments on the Definition of Core Labor Standards........................................................... 12 For Using the ILO Definition of Core Labor Standards ................................................... 12 Against .............................................................................................................................. 12 Another Option: The U.S.-Jordan FTA Approach............................................................. 13 Possible Outcomes and Implications............................................................................................. 13 Most Recent Developments........................................................................................................... 14 ¢ Figure 1. TPA/Fast-Track Laws and Their Labor Provisions, and FTAs and Their Enforceable Labor Provisions, 1974-2007................................................................................... 7 Table A-1. Worker Rights Provisions in TPA/Fast-Track Authority, 1974-2007 .......................... 17 Table A-2. Key Labor Provisions in FTAs Negotiated under Various TPA/Fast-Track Laws ........................................................................................................................................... 18 Table A-3. Enforceable Labor Provisions Included in H.R. 3019 (Rangel, 107th Congress) ........ 19 ¡ Appendix. Tables........................................................................................................................... 17 Author Contact Information .......................................................................................................... 19 ¢ Trade promotion authority (TPA), formerly known as "fast track" authority, is scheduled to expire July 1, 2007. With it will expire the authority that Congress grants the President to enter into certain trade agreements, and the authority for Congress to consider implementing legislation for them under expedited procedures. The Administration is still negotiating a number of trade agreements that may not be completed before the TPA is set to expire. Thus, TPA/fast-track renewal may be a central issue in the 110th Congress if these activities are to continue.1 Within the TPA/fast-track renewal debate, a major issue is expected to be which labor provisions to set forth as as "principal negotiating objectives"--that is, which labor provisions to set forth as "a priority for negotiators to seek" in trade agreements.2 Two sets of provisions are probable candidates. One, supported by labor advocates, is expected to be: to ensure that a party does not fail to enforce core labor standards in a manner affecting trade. Related provisions could (1) identify a set of mutually agreed upon "core labor standards" (defined in the next section) and (2) provide that violation of these standards would be subject to enforcement under the single set of dispute settlement procedures that would be applicable to all disputes. An alternative is expected to be the current principal negotiating objective: to ensure that a party does not fail to enforce its own labor laws, commonly referred to as the "enforce-your-own" standard. This provision would be enforceable under current dispute settlement procedures that call for treating principal negotiating objectives "equally." The difference between the two approaches reflects criticism by labor advocates that, in general, labor provisions in FTAs negotiated so far: (1) lack the enforceability of commercial provisions; (2) "clearly fail to meet some congressional negotiating objectives [for trade agreements and] barely comply with others"; (3) "represent a big step back" from both the U.S.-Jordan FTA (negotiated and approved during a hiatus when TPA/fast-track authority had expired), and from U.S. unilateral trade preference programs such as the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP); and (4) "completely exclude obligations for governments to meet such international standards as worker rights."3 The issue of including enforceable core labor standards as a principal negotiating objective also reflects a strategy to change the way labor interests are mirrored in trade agreements by tightening the blueprint for them. Opponents argue that provisions in FTAs negotiated under the current TPA: (1) are the strongest labor provisions attached to FTAs to date; (2) are the product of bilateral negotiation; and (3) both depend on and reflect mutual agreement by negotiating countries over which provisions to include. Opponents also argue: (4) that enforceable core labor standards would raise sovereignty issues. 1 For a general discussion on TPA renewal, see CRS Report RL33743, Trade Promotion Authority (TPA): Issues, Options, and Prospects for Renewal, by J. F. Hornbeck and William H. Cooper. 2 The Trade Act of 2002 does not specifically define "principal negotiating objective." However, the Conference Report, H.Rept. 107-624, p. 229, defines it using the words quoted above. 3 See, for example, U.S. Chile Free Trade Agreement, Report of the Labor Advisory Committee for Trade Negotiations and Trade Policy (LAC), February 28, 2003, p. 3. (The LAC consisted of 58 members of various unions.) ¢ This report examines the issues raised by labor advocates and responses by opponents. It does so in the larger context of how and where enforceable labor provisions in TPA/fast-track authority and the trade agreements negotiated under them intersect with global labor issues. Thus, it first identifies the stakeholders who care (positively or negatively) about enforceable labor provisions, and their positions on the issue. After that, it: (1) tracks the enforceable labor provisions in TPA/fast-track laws and the FTAs they have spawned; (2) presents some legislative options for new TPA/fast-track provisions relating to enforceable labor provisions; and (3) sets out arguments for and against enforceable core labor standards from the perspective of the parties that could be affected by the standards. Finally, it looks at possible outcomes and implications of the various legislative options. For an overview of most recent developments on this issue, please turn to the last section before the Appendix. Labor advocates have been proposing that renewed TPA/fast-track authority include, as a principal negotiating objective for trade agreements, a handful of "enforceable" "core labor standards," or "internationally recognized worker rights." The terms "internationally recognized worker rights" or "core labor standards" are technically defined in separate ways, by U.S. Trade law (the Trade Act of 1974, Sec. 507), and the International Labor Organization (ILO, a United Nations organization).4 Both definitions are almost identical, and share four standards or rights: (1) the right to organize, (2) the right to bargain collectively, (3) prohibition of forced labor, and (4) protections for child labor including the "worst forms of child labor."5 They differ on the fifth standard. U.S. law identifies it as: (5) labor standards pertaining to minimum wages, maximum hours, and occupational safety and health. ILO conventions define it as: (5) freedom from employment discrimination.6 In recent years these terms have become somewhat confusing because the current TPA law included in the Trade Act of 2002 and trade agreements negotiated under it have adopted the U.S. list of "internationally recognized worker rights" as the definition of the term "core labor standards." Consequently, this report will use the term "core labor standards" to refer to either list, and will mention "ILO core labor standards," "U.S. internationally recognized worker rights," or "U.S. list" only when referring to standards defined by either specific source. 4 For the ILO definition of "core labor standards" and a table of countries that have signed onto each, see the ILO table of "Ratifications of the Fundamental human rights Conventions by country" at http://www.ilo.org/ilolex/english/docs/ declworld.htm which includes direct links to the texts of each core labor standard. 5 The "worst forms of child labor" include the employment of children for purposes including prostitution, pornography, drug trafficking, armed conflict, and forced labor. 6 The Trade Act of 1974 refers to the U.S. list as "internationally recognized worker rights." The ILO refers to its list as "core labor standards." The current TPA authority in the Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002, Title XXI of the Trade Act of 2002, combines the ILO name and the U.S. list, defining the U.S. list as "core labor standards." ¢ ¢ Labor advocates appear to have two objectives in promoting some type of enforceable core labor standards--one international, and the other domestic. Internationally, the objective of labor advocates seemingly is humanitarian: to promote the protection of workers around the world, particularly those in developing countries, where global investment converges to take advantage of cheap labor. In such countries adults or even children may have to work long hours, under unhealthy and unsafe conditions, with few personal or hygienic freedoms, for low pay. Moreover, they may not be permitted the basic right to form unions and bargain collectively with their employers to improve those conditions.7 Domestically, the objective of labor advocates is seemingly more economic: to help "level the playing field "between U.S. and foreign workers, so that U.S. workers can compete with those in developing countries on a more equitable basis. A more equitable playing field, they argue, would provide at least some incentive for businesses to find ways to remain and/or expand in the United States instead of looking for ways to "offshore" parts of their operations to countries where labor costs are cheaper. Estimates on U.S. jobs "lost" to international trade and offshore outsourcing are hard to come by. However, jobs at risk have expanded from blue collar to white collar and from the manufacturing to high end service sector and research and development jobs, and now include, in addition to call center and data entry jobs, higher skill professional jobs in fields such as engineering, computer chip design, nanotechnology, and medical test analysis, that have become important in the knowledge-based economy. Opposite labor advocates are many business groups whose main objective is typically to support the passage of TPA/fast-track authority in order to facilitate the expansion of U.S. multinational corporations abroad--their most important avenue for continued growth. Both TPA/fast-track authority and trade agreements typically include many protections for investors. For eight years between 1994 and 2002, however, the issue of whether or not to include any kind of enforceable labor provisions in trade agreements was a major point of contention in the debate over renewal of TPA/fast-track authority. During that time, some TPA/fast-track renewal bills would have prohibited some types of labor provisions in trade agreements negotiated under them.8 Ultimately, a 2001 report prepared for the U.S. Trade Representative by the Business Roundtable, made up of chief executive officers from roughly 200 major companies, led the way 7 For a summary on working conditions in various countries, see the State Department's Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, updated yearly. Each year the volume updates reports on worker rights conditions in many countries around the world. 8 See CRS Report RL31178, Trade Promotion Authority (Fast-Track): Labor Issues (Including H.R. 3005 and H.R. 3009), by Mary Jane Bolle. ¢ toward TPA/fast-track renewal in 2002 when it said, "in pursuing labor (and environmental) objectives in trade and investment negotiations, the United States must grant our trade negotiators the flexibility to negotiate." It stressed that "International labor and environmental issues have emerged as the principal stumbling blocks. The Business Roundtable believes. . . that the issue is no longer whether they should be addressed in international trade and investment negotiations, but rather how to address them constructively."9 Developing countries care about how enforceable core labor standards affect (either positively or negatively) their ability to attract investment. In 1996, at the World Trade Organization (WTO) Singapore Ministerial (a meeting of ministers of WTO members), developing countries, which formed a majority there, voted down the U.S. proposal for a committee to study the relationship between worker rights and trade. They did so because they were afraid formation of such a committee could lead to the imposition of enforceable labor standards that could undercut their comparative advantage in low-cost labor. As a result of these votes, the Singapore Declaration (the final document summarizing what they decided) named the ILO as the "competent body to set and deal with" international labor standards.10 The ILO has as its main enforcement mechanism the tools of consensus and persuasion. ¡ The Administration's position on enforceable labor standards, although it reflects the principal negotiating objectives of the FTA/fast-track laws, has shifted with various presidents and various circumstances. It typically mirrors the interests of the party it represents. The Clinton Administration was supportive of enforceable labor standards in trade agreements. First, it negotiated the labor side agreement to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Then, it pushed for studying the link between worker rights and trade at the 1997 Singapore Ministerial as mentioned above. Next, it promoted worker rights protections at the subsequent 1999 Ministerial in Seattle, Washington. The conference there was cut short for a number of reasons including issues between developed and developing countries.11 Finally, in 2000, it negotiated the U.S.-Jordan FTA that included technically enforceable U.S. and ILO core labor standards in the body of the agreement. However, in an exchange of letters, Jordan's ambassador to the United States and the U.S. Trade Representative agreed to resolve any disputes that might arise without resorting to sanctions. The Bush Administration has negotiated nine FTAs with one enforceable labor provision in the body of each agreement. More recently, however, the Administration has reportedly signaled a willingness to renegotiate labor provisions in the Peru and Colombian FTAs (awaiting congressional consideration), to strengthen enforceable labor provisions.12 9 Business Round Table. The Case for U.S. Trade Leadership: the United States is Falling Behind, February 9, 2001, p. 4, 20. 10 From the Singapore Declaration, signed by representatives of WTO countries present at the first meeting of Ministers of WTO countries in Singapore, December, 1996, contained in the WTO Annual Report, 1997. 11 See WTO Protests in Seattle, 1999. Free Trade and Globalization, February 18, 2001. 12 Veroneau Signals U.S. Willingness to Renegotiate Labor in Peru, Colombia FTAs. Inside U.S. Trade, January 17, 2007. ¢ ¢ Two of the three TPA/fast-track laws passed by Congress over the past 30 years have included labor provisions. These TPA/fast-track laws have facilitated the negotiation and approval of a total of eight FTAs so far, as follows: The first TPA/fast-track law to include labor provisions as principal negotiating objectives was the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 (OTCA, P.L. 100-418). Its full list of labor principal negotiating objectives is included in the Table A-1. Most importantly, these include the general but vague requirement: " to promote worker rights." This requirement led to the first labor provisions attached to a bilateral or regional trade agreement.13 The agreement was NAFTA, and labor provisions were included in a labor side agreement, not in the body of the agreement itself. The labor side agreement included (1) labor provisions with limited enforceability, detailed below; (2) its own dispute resolution procedures for labor issues; and (3) a dollar cap on penalties. The labor provisions in the NAFTA labor side agreement required that each Party (the United States, Mexico, and Canada) enforce its own labor laws and standards. Only two of the five core labor standards, however, were to be enforceable, and one of these is only partially enforceable. The enforceable standards are for: (a) child labor protections; and (b) two components of labor standards: minimum wages and occupational safety and health. Among standards not enforceable under the NAFTA labor side agreement were a country's own laws protecting the rights of workers to organize and bargain collectively. After the OTCA, there was an eight-year hiatus when there was no TPA/fast-track law, 1994- 2002. During this time, the Administration negotiated and Congress approved the U.S.-Jordan FTA. This agreement included a number of labor provisions in the body of the agreement that were technically enforceable through the agreement's single dispute resolution procedure. Some of these provisions were later echoed in the Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002, discussed below. The most important such labor provision specified that parties "shall not fail to effectively enforce" their own labor laws "through a sustained or recurring course of action or inaction in a manner affecting trade between the parties." Labor laws were defined as the U.S. list, recognizing the right of each party to exercise enforcement discretion. Parties also agreed to: (a) strive to ensure that both ILO and U.S. core labor standards are recognized and protected by domestic law; and (b) recognize the right of each party to establish, modify, and improve its labor standards. For more details on these provisions, see Table A-2. 13 Article XX(e) of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), 1969, establishing the predecessor to the World Trade Organization (WTO), permits discrimination against products produced by prison labor. ¢ ¢ The second TPA law with principal negotiating objectives for labor was the Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002 (Title XXI of the Trade Act of 2002, P.L. 107-210), which is set to expire July 1, 2007. Its principal negotiating objectives for labor (repeated in Table A-1) include (1) "to ensure that a party does not fail to effectively enforce its own labor laws"; and (2) "to strengthen the capacity of U.S. trading partners to promote respect for core labor standards." Modifying these provisions are others in the list of principal negotiating objectives for labor that offer protections for governments, businesses, and investors: (3) to recognize that parties to a trade agreement retain the right to exercise discretion in the allocation of enforcement resources; and (4) to ensure that labor practices of the parties do not arbitrarily or unjustifiably discriminate against U.S. exports or serve as disguised barriers to trade. Under this TPA seven trade agreements have been negotiated and approved.14 These are with Chile, Singapore, Australia, Morocco, Bahrain, Oman, and a single agreement with five Central American Countries (Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua) and the Dominican Republic, known as CAFTA-DR. In addition, this TPA has facilitated agreements with two other countries (Peru and Colombia) which are awaiting congressional action.15 Labor provisions in the various agreements are detailed in Table A-2. For dispute resolution, the principal negotiating objective is (5) "to seek provisions that treat [all--i.e. including those for labor and those for commercial disputes] U.S. principal negotiating objectives equally with respect to the ability to resort to dispute settlement and the availability of equivalent dispute settlement procedures and remedies." In what is seen by labor advocates as a departure from this language, two characteristics stand out. First, each of the seven trade agreements has only one labor provision subject to the agreement's dispute settlement process-- that each country must enforce its own labor laws. Second, procedures for labor disputes differ in several respects from those for commercial disputes and include a cap on monetary penalties. Opponents, argue, however, that the treatment of labor and commercial disputes is equal because the procedures and remedies are "equivalent." 14 CRS reports addressing these FTAs include the following: CRS Report RL31356, Free Trade Agreements: Impact on U.S. Trade and Implications for U.S. Trade Policy, by William H. Cooper; CRS Report RS21846, U.S.-Bahrain Free Trade Agreement, by Martin A. Weiss; CRS Report RL31870, The Dominican Republic-Central America-United States Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR), by J. F. Hornbeck; CRS Report RS21560, Free Trade Agreements with Singapore and Chile: Labor Issues, by Mary Jane Bolle; CRS Report RL32375, The U.S.-Australia Free Trade Agreement: Provisions and Implications, by William H. Cooper; CRS Report RL33328, U.S.-Oman Free Trade Agreement, by Mary Jane Bolle; CRS Report RS20968, Jordan-U.S. Free Trade Agreement: Labor Issues, by Mary Jane Bolle; CRS Report RS21464, Morocco-U.S. Free Trade Agreement, by Raymond J. Ahearn; CRS Report RS22159, DR-CAFTA Labor Rights Issues, by Mary Jane Bolle; and CRS Report 97-861, NAFTA Labor Side Agreement: Lessons for the Worker Rights and Fast-Track Debate, by Mary Jane Bolle. 15 See CRS Report RS22521, Peru Trade Promotion Agreement: Labor Issues, by Mary Jane Bolle and M. Angeles Villarreal; and CRS Report RS22419, U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement, by M. Angeles Villarreal. ¢ riehT dna sATF dna ,snoisivorP robaL riehT dna swaL kcarT-tsaF/APT.1 erugiF 7002-4791 ,snoisivorP robaL elbaecrofnE .swal noitatnemelpmi ATF dna swal APT suoirav morf derehtag ataD :ecruoS .tnemucod eht devorppa ssergnoC taht sraey tcelfer setaD :etoN Figure 1 summarizes, along a time line, the congressionally-passed sequence of TPA/fast-track authorities (in larger type) and the trade agreements negotiated under them (smaller type). Also listed are the key labor provisions in each. When discussing legislative options for renewal of the TPA/fast-track authority, it is important to keep in mind several things: First, TPA/fast-track authority represents statutory requirements for presidential negotiation of FTAs, rather than requirements for ultimate provisions in the FTAs. Second, a number of factors may converge to determine the ultimate labor provisions in FTAs, including (1) the labor agenda of the negotiating Parties; (2) the ability of the United States to persuade potential partner countries to agree to various provisions; (3) the political makeup of the Congress which must vote the agreements up or down; and (4) the level of acceptance of labor provisions by the business community. While there may be any number of possible legislative options to address the issue of enforceable labor provisions in TPA/fast-track renewal, four are discussed below. ¢ Without the protection of TPA/fast-track authority, with its prohibition on amendments to FTAs and its requirement for limited debates, some argue, foreign countries may be less inclined to negotiate trade agreements with the United States. This is because foreign countries would know that anything they agreed upon could possibly be amended by Congress and sent back for further negotiation. On the other hand, Congress would be more involved in negotiating any agreements the Administration desired to pursue. TPA/fast-track renewal that does not include enforceable labor provisions as a principal negotiating objective would likely be viewed by some as a step back from the expiring TPA/fast- track authority. On the other hand, this does not preclude the President from negotiating labor provisions. ¡ ¢ Current TPA/fast-track principal negotiating objectives include three key elements plus their modifying qualifications, mentioned earlier: (1) to ensure that a party does not fail to enforce its own labor laws; (2) to strengthen the capacity of U.S. trading partners to promote respect for core labor standards; and (3) to seek provisions that treat [all] U.S. principal negotiating objectives equally with respect to the ability to resort to dispute settlement, the availability of equivalent dispute settlement procedures, and the availability of equivalent remedies. Option four includes principal negotiating objectives that would go one step beyond those in option 3, and actually list "enforceable core labor standards" as a principal negotiating objective. They could also include language in principal negotiating objectives for dispute resolution procedures to ensure that all principal negotiating objectives (i.e. for both labor and commercial issues) are fully disputable and covered by a single dispute resolution process. One possible configuration of option 4 was reflected in a TPA/fast-track renewal bill introduced by Representative Charles Rangel in the 107th Congress in 2001 (H.R. 3019). H.R. 3019 would have included enforceable labor standards defined by a short list of ILO core labor standards as principal negotiating objectives for labor. It would also have included (a) protections and assistance for governments; and (b) a single set of dispute resolution procedures relating to all principal negotiating objectives. ¢ More specifically, in H.R. 3019, these concepts translated into the following provisions (further detailed in Table A-3): (1) to negotiate enforceable rules that provide for the adoption and enforcement of a handful of standards that read like ILO core labor standards; (2) to establish as a trigger for invoking the dispute settlement process either: (a) failure to effectively enforce one's own domestic labor standards; or (b) waiver or derogation from domestic labor standards in order to attract investment or gain a competitive advantage; and (3) a single dispute resolution procedure for all types of complaints. Its would also have contained the following types of provisions relating to enforcement assistance, flexibility, and monitoring: (a) the right of Parties to exercise enforcement discretion; (b) the right of parties to establish, adopt, or modify their own labor standards consistent with core labor standards; (c) phased-in compliance for least-developed countries; (d) a program of technical assistance; and (e) regular review of adherence to core labor standards. "Should enforceable core labor standards be included as a principal negotiating objective?" is likely to be the main labor issue for Congress to consider in TPA/fast-track renewal. If the answer to this question is "yes," the follow-up question would be, "Which definition or definitions of core labor standards should be included?" While the AFL-CIO and other labor advocates argue in favor of ILO core labor standards or their equivalents, the U.S. Council for International Business (USCIB) argues against this position, saying it could require that U.S. laws be changed to comply. The model of the U.S.-Jordan FTA offers a third option. In the arguments below, those against enforceable labor standards as principal negotiating objectives are generally in favor of continuing the enforce-your-own labor standards in the current TPA. The ILO is not represented in this debate. It typically does not take a position on specific legislation including TPA/fast-track renewal. This is because its official role is that of promoting worker rights through technical assistance and consensus building.16 Those in favor of a principal negotiating objective for FTA/fast-track legislation that calls for strong enforceable labor standards in the body of the agreement include the AFL-CIO,17 Human Rights Watch,18 and the International Labor Rights Fund.19 Human Rights Watch argues that "the debate over TPA/fast-track renewal presents a unique and important opportunity to think creatively on protecting worker rights in the context of trade, 16 CRS conversation with ILO Washington staff in the Spring of 2006. 17 CRS conversation with Thea Lee, Policy Director of the AFL-CIO, January 16, 2007. 18 CRS conversation with Carol Pier, Labor Rights and Trade Senior Researcher, Human Rights Watch, January 16, 2007. 19 CRS conversation with Bama Althreya, Executive Director of the International Labor Rights Fund, January 16, 2007. ¢ learning from the example of the U.S.-Cambodia Textile Agreement.20 The U.S.-Cambodia Textile Agreement rewards compliance with local labor laws and international standards with an increase in export quotas to the United States. Labor advocates traditionally argue that enforceable core labor standards in trade agreements can define the line between comparative advantage and "social dumping"--competing by denying worker rights. Such denial, they argue, ends up in a "race to the bottom," as workers all over the world compete against each other for scarce jobs. They also argue that labor standards do not interfere with natural comparative advantage in developing countries because labor standards are only one basis for comparative advantage. Others are: (a) abundance of available workforce; (b) skills and education level of the available labor force; (c) infrastructure; (d) level of technological development of the country; and (e) natural resource base.21 The USCIB is the American affiliate of the International Chamber of Commerce, the International Organization of Employers, and the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD. Its membership includes some 300 leading U.S. companies, professional services firms, and associations. It argues for the continuation of the enforce-your-own standard and against enforceable core labor standards as a principal negotiating objective. This is because it supports and promotes an open system of global commerce in which businesses can flourish and contribute to economic growth, human welfare, and protection of the environment.22 Those against principal negotiating objectives that call for enforceable core labor standards in trade agreements also typically argue that the enforce-your-own standards model provides a more direct, less encumbered path to economic growth. In addition, most developing countries have few resources to devote to labor standards enforcement, given the many competing needs for use of scarce resources. Meanwhile, once a developing country is more economially developed and relatively near full employment, workers typically have the clout to begin to demand better protection from their governments on their own. Imposing core labor standards on developing countries too soon, some argue, could: (1) interfere with their comparative advantage in cheap labor; and (2) amount to protectionism--the imposition of an additional set of non-tariff barriers--when the purpose of trade agreements is to reduce trade barriers and stimulate trade and investment. 20 CRS conversation with Carol Pier, op. cit. The U.S.-Cambodia Textile Agreement provides for a 6% minimum annual quota increase for Cambodia textile imports, but allows the United States to raise quota limits up to an additional 18% if working conditions in that sector substantially comply with local labor laws and international standards. Source: Labor Rights Protections in CAFTA, A Human Rights Watch briefing paper, October, 2003. 21 See CRS Report 96-661, Worker Rights Provisions and Trade Policy: Should They Be Linked?, by Mary Jane Bolle. 22 CRS communication from Adam B. Greene, Vice President, Labor Affairs and Corporate Responsibility, USCIB, January 18, 2007. ¢ Labor advocates argue that a principal negotiating objective calling for enforceable labor standards can help level the playing field for U.S. workers and make them more competitive internationally. Others argue that there are better ways to help U.S. workers than to try to level the playing field, which, at best, may only slow the offshore movement of some U.S. jobs. A better way, they argue, may be to expand trade adjustment assistance benefits, educational benefits, or other training and retraining programs to cover all displaced workers, and help them transition into new careers regardless of whether the job loss resulted from trade or technology. Still others might argue that the need or desire to earn a living is often incentive enough to encourage workers displaced by offshoring to find new employment. Labor advocates argue that in order for workers to become consumers, they must share in the gains of increasing productivity and economic expansion, and that enforceable core labor standards can help promote these gains. Opponents argue that real gains in standard of living come from rising productivity, not artificially imposed labor standards including minimum wages. In addition some workers do not want enforceable core labor standards because these, they argue, could limit their ability to maximize their earnings through overtime hours. Opponents also argue that enforceable labor standards are not needed in principal negotiating objectives because other resources besides trade agreements are available to encourage countries to help raise labor standards to protect foreign workers. These include (1) U.S. trade preference programs which require that beneficiary countries either currently afford or be taking steps to afford their workers internationally recognized worker rights;23 (2) the ILO which offers technical support to countries to help them adopt and enforce core labor standards; (3) international labor groups which serve as "watchdogs" bringing abusive labor conditions to light in the radio, print, and film/video media; (4) evolutionary forces in countries characterized by workers themselves 23 U.S. trade preference programs include the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP), the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (CBERA), the Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA), the Andean Trade Preference Act (ATPA), and the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA.) In some cases, the U.S. government has withdrawn or is anticipating withdrawal of preferential trade status from countries after an FTA with them has gone into effect. ¢ insisting on better labor conditions as their economies grow; (5) codes of conduct for multinational corporations which provide some level of accountability for corporations doing business in developing countries; and (6) U.S. government grants for improving labor standards and their enforcement through "trade capacity building." ¢ Those in favor of enforceable core labor standards as a principal negotiating objective could argue that the ILO already requires that countries comply with ILO core labor standards as a condition of remaining members in good standing, even if they do not formally approve the ILO conventions.24 Those against enforceable core labor standards as a principal negotiating objective might argue that including enforceable ILO core labor standards as principal negotiating objectives could come very close to interfering with national sovereignty. They might also point out that under the ILO, a country's failure to adhere to core labor standards is not punishable with sanctions. Such observers would be likely to support, as an alternative, the enforce-your-own standards in the current TPA/fast-track authority. One option for the definition of core labor standards is the ILO definition. Those against this option could be in favor of the U.S. definition of "internationally recognized worker rights." Still others could be in favor of a more flexible definition that could accommodate a country's compliance with the spirit and/or details of either the ILO or the U.S. definition, or both. The AFL-CIO is strongly in favor of enforceable ILO core labor standards as a principal negotiating objective, arguing that the ILO conventions are more current than U.S. internationally recognized worker rights.25 Human Rights Watch, while not arguing for either ILO core labor standards or U.S. internationally recognized worker rights by name, argues that the definition of core labor standard must include employment discrimination (which is in the ILO but not the U.S. definition.) If the ILO definition is adopted, foreign governments could hold existing U.S. labor laws up to scrutiny, arguing that they don't totally comply with ILO Core Labor Standards. In fact, the 24 About the Declaration (on Fundamental Principals and Rights at Work). ILO website at http://www.ilo.org. 25 CRS conversation with Thea Lee, op. cit. ¢ United States has ratified only two conventions (one on forced labor and one on the worst forms of child labor).26 Accordingly, the USCIB argues that many U.S. labor laws would need to be changed to come into compliance with the ILO definition of core labor standards. U.S. law would particularly need to be amended, the USCIB argues, in such areas as forced labor, minimum age for employment, and employment discrimination. This conclusion was reached through a number of studies by the presidentially appointed Tripartite Advisory Panel on International Labor Standards (TAPILS)--a research group made up of USCIB as a representative of business, the AFL-CIO representing labor, and the U.S. government.27 The enforceable labor provisions in the Jordan FTA (included in Table A-2), negotiated and approved when there was no TPA/fast-track coverage, represent a third option for the definition of core labor standards. The Jordan FTA carries what many observers consider the strongest labor provisions yet. All labor provisions are located in the body of the agreement and all are fully enforceable.28 Under the U.S.-Jordan FTA, Parties agree to: (1) Reaffirm obligations under the ILO and strive to ensure that both these labor principles and "internationally recognized worker rights" are recognized and protected by domestic law. Parties also: (2) agree to not fail to effectively enforce their own labor laws in a manner that affects trade between the Parties; (3) agree to strive to ensure that they do not waiver or derogate from their own labor laws in order to encourage trade with the other party; (4) recognize the right of each party to establish, adopt, or modify its labor laws and regulations, and strive to ensure that its laws provide for labor standards consistent with [U.S. defined] internationally recognized worker rights; and (5) recognize that each party retains enforcement discretion with respect to other matters deemed to have higher priority. Others argue that while the dispute resolution procedures for the Jordan agreement do not preclude a broad array of sanctions for non-compliance, most of the obligations in the Jordan agreement are "hortatory" or strongly urged rather than mandates. Thus, there is only one obligation that may be enforced, and a party wishing to complain over the existence and administration of labor laws would need to make the more difficult case that government conduct "severely distort[s] the balance of trade benefits" or "substantially undermine[s] fundamental objectives of [the] Agreement."29 Whether TPA/fast-track is renewed, and whether the negotiation of enforceable core labor standards is included in any such renewal, international trade is likely to continue to expand in both volume and complexity. If TPA/fast-track renewal is proposed and debated, the issue of enforceable core labor standards is likely to remain important to labor advocates, business groups, 26 See ILO table of ratifications at http://www.ilo.org/ilolex/english/docs/declworld.htm. 27 CRS communication from Adam B. Greene, op. cit. 28 However, in anticipation of and just prior to congressional floor consideration of the Jordan agreement, the U.S. Ambassador from Jordan Marwan Muasher and the U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick, exchanged letters agreeing to resolve any disputes that might arise without resort to sanctions. 29 See Article 17(1)(a)(iii) of the U.S.-Jordan FTA. This is often referred to as a "non-violation" case. ¢ the U.S. government, and foreign governments, for various reasons, as efforts are made to find a compromise position. If enforceable core labor standards were to be adopted as a principal negotiating objective in TPA/fast-track authority, and if enforceable core labor standards were then to be negotiated into trade agreements approved by Congress, the inclusion of the enforceable standards could move TPA/fast-track authority along its evolutionary path to a new level of protection for U.S. and foreign workers. Business advocates, however, could continue to hold concerns that such standards could interfere with their economic efficiency. The economic effects of any enforceable core labor standards in any TPA/fast-track renewal on U.S. workers, foreign workers, and businesses, however, would likely be small, and would depend on a number of factors including 1) the extent to which enforceable core labor standards were adopted and implemented in trade agreements; 2) the number of trade agreements affected; 3) the magnitude of U.S. trade with countries affected by any such agreements; and 4) the extent of actual enforcement of any such standards in trade agreements. In addition, the effects from any of these four factors could be dwarfed by any shifts in the value of the dollar that might occur relative to other currencies. If enforceable core labor standards were to be included in any renewed TPA/fast-track authority and were then to be included in trade agreements negotiated thereunder, many challenges would remain with regard to enforcement. Foreign governments typically have many competing needs for scarce resources besides protecting the health and safety of their workers. In addition, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative and the Commerce Department, working together to process trade disputes, would have to choose which disputes to pursue in order to make the best use of scarce agency resources. If core labor standards were to be enforced, businesses would then have to face a decision as to what impact, if any, this would have on their investment decisions. If enforceable core labor standards were adopted as a principal negotiating objective in TPA/fast- track legislation, whether or not the United States would need to make any changes to its labor laws could depend on which definition of core labor standards were to be adopted. It is likely that if "enforceable core labor standards" were to be identified as a principal negotiating objective, they would be defined in such a way that no changes in U.S. law might be required. If TPA/fast-track authority is not renewed, or if it should be renewed without enforceable core labor standards, a number of ways remain to promote labor standards and protect worker rights. These include standards currently incorporated into U.S. trade preference programs; continuing efforts of the ILO to promote core labor standards; the efforts of various labor advocates and international labor "watchdog" groups; economic development forces in various countries which eventually lead to protections of the rights of workers; codes of conduct guiding the actions of corporations in protecting the rights of international workers; and U.S. government "trade capacity building" grants which help to improve labor standards in developing countries. In April, 2007, three months before the expiration of TPA, House Ways and Means and Committee chairman Charles Rangel and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus made it clear that the Bush administration must make the case for extending TPA/fast-track ¢ negotiating authority, and could not expect Congress to extend it automatically when it expires July 1.30 A key issue for many Democrats was the inclusion of enforceable International Labor Organization (ILO) core labor standards in TPA principal negotiating objectives and in trade agreements negotiated under them. Chairman Rangel, at hearings featuring U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) Susan Schwab, indicated that he was interested engaging in a continuing dialogue with the Administration, over the issue of enforceable labor standards, to see if a compromise might be worked out. On May 10, after much negotiation, Congress and the Administration announced a shift in labor- trade policy: Pending U.S. trade agreements would be amended to incorporate "key Democratic priorities" to "expand and shape trade in ways that spread the benefits of globalization here and abroad by raising standards." The release also announced that "this policy clears the way for broad, bipartisan congressional support" for the pending FTAs. Key provisions of the agreement include: · A fully enforceable commitment that FTA countries will adopt, maintain and enforce in their laws and practice the five basic international labor standards, as stated in the 1998 International Labor Organization Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work.31 · A new fully enforceable, binding commitment prohibiting FTA countries from lowering labor standards; · New limitations on "prosecutorial" and "enforcement" discretion. FTA countries cannot defend the failure to enforce laws related to the five basic standards due to resource limitations or decisions to prioritize other enforcement issues; and · Same dispute settlement mechanisms/penalties as other FTA obligations. These concepts were then translated into "template language" agreed to by the Administration and key Democratic leaders in Congress. The template language incorporating these concepts was then inserted into trade agreements with Peru, Panama, Colombia, and South Korea, under agreement between the United States and the respective countries. At issue was how "core labor standards" would be defined. The concern was to avoid any possible need to amend U.S. law to conform with any strict definitions of ILO "core labor standards" that might be incorporated into language in the trade agreements. The final template language solved this problem by defining "core labor standards" as a set of principles only, rather than as a set of ILO conventions or detailed requirements. Specifically, the language specifies that each party shall maintain in its statutes and regulations the rights "as stated in the ILO Declaration of Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work and its Follow-Up (1998)." 30 Trade Committee Chairmen Say U.S. Must Make Case for Fast Track. Inside U.S. Trade, April 20, 2007. 31 These are: the freedom of association; the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining; the elimination of all forms of forced or compulsory labor; the effective abolition of child labor and a prohibition on the worst forms of child labor; and the elimination of discrimination in respect of employment and occupation. Source: Text: Congress, Administration Trade Deal. Inside U.S. Trade, May 11, 2007. ¢ The ILO Declaration, in turn, lists four basic rights of workers as core labor standards, but does not define them. Nor does it include or directly reference the detailed language of the eight core labor standards which define those rights. A footnote to the template language in the various agreements (quoted in the paragraph above) further reinforces this point, by saying that the obligations set out in the Article refer only to the ILO Declaration. .SRC yb delipmoc elbaT :ecruoS .]yhpargonrop ro ,gnikciffart ,edart gurd ,raw sa sgniht hcus ni esu ot gniniatrep[ "robal dlihc fo smrof tsrow" eht gnitibihorp swal nwo rieht ecrofne ylsuorogiv ot stnemeerga edart ot seitrap yb stnemtimmoc kees ot :ROBAL DLIHC FO SMROF TSROW )71()b(2012 .ceS .seidemer tnelaviuqe fo ytilibaliava ehT )iii( dna ;serudecorp tnemelttes etupsid tnelaviuqe fo ytilibaliava ehT )ii( ;tnemelttes etupsid ot troser ot ytiliba ehT )i( --ot tcepser htiw yllauqe sevitcejbo gnitaitogen lapicnirp .S.U taert taht snoisivorp kees oT )G( :TNEMECROFNE DNA TNEMELTTES ETUPSID )21()b(2012 .ceS .edart ot sreirrab desiugsid sa evres 6002 ,)RD-ATFAC ro stropxe .S.U tsniaga etanimircsid ylbaifitsujnu ro ylirartibra sa nwonk( cilbupeR ton od seitrap eht fo secitcarp robal taht erusne oT )G( nacinimoD eht ]TUB[ ;sdradnats robal eroc rof tcepser etomorp dna aciremA lartneC ot srentrap gnidart .S.U fo yticapac eht nehtgnerts oT )C( ;secruoser tnemecrofne fo noitacolla 6002 ,namO eht gnidrager snoisiced ekam dna noitercsid esicrexe ot thgir 6002 ,niarhaB eht niater tnemeerga edart a ot seitrap taht ezingocer oT )B( 4002 ,occoroM ]TUB[ ;swal robal 4002 ,ailartsuA nwo sti ecrofne ylevitceffe ot liaf ton seod ytrap a erusne oT )A( 3002 ,eropagniS :robaL rof SEVITCEJBO GNITAITOGEN LAPICNIRP )11( )b( 2012 .ceS 3002 ,elihC .OLI eht fo sdradnats robal )7002 ,1 yluJ eripxe :htiw stnemeergA eroc htiw tnetsisnoc sthgir rekrow rof tcepser etomorp ot )6( ot tes ,012-701 .L.P( edarT eerF :robaL rof SEVITCEJBO GNITAITOGEN LLAREVO )a(2012 .ceS 2002 fo tcA edarT 7002-2002 1002 ,nadroJ enoN enoN 2002-4991 .edart lanoitanretni ni egatnavda evititepmoc niag ot seirtsudni sti fo yrtnuoc a rof snaem a eb ton dluohs sthgir rekrow fo lained eht taht TTAG eht fo elpicnirp a sa tpoda ot )d( dna ;srekrow lla ot elbaliava era metsys gnidart eht fo stifeneb eht taht erusne ot )c( ;selcitra )OTW- noitazinagrO edarT dlroW eht ot rossecederp 3991 ,13 rebmeceD eht ,TTAG( edarT dna ffiraT no tnemeergA lareneG ot sthgir gniripxe yletamitlu 3991 ,)ATFAN( rekrow fo pihsnoitaler eht fo weiver a eruces ot )b( ;sthgir ,dednema sa )814 tnemeergA edarT rekrow etomorp ot )a( :sevitcejbo gnitaitogen lapicnirp ni sthgir -001 .L.P( 8891 fo eerF naciremA htroN rekrow seificeps ,SEVITCEJBO GNITAITOGEN LAPICNIRP ,1011 .ceS tcA edarT subinmO 3991-8891 8891 ,ATF adanaC-.S.U 8891 ,3 yraunaJ gniripxe 5891 yletamitlu dednema ,)ATF( tnemeergA sa )86-39 .L.P( edarT eerF learsI-.S.U .snoisivorp sthgir rekrow oN 4791 fo tcA edarT 8891-4791 raeY lavorppA sevitcejbO ytirohtuA raeY dna ytirohtuA gnitaitogeN lapicnirP ni snoisivorP sthgiR rekroW kcarT-tsaF/APT kcarT-tsaF/APT siht rednU devorppA stnemeergA 7002-4791 ,ytirohtuA kcarT-tsaF/APT ni snoisivorP sthgiR rekroW .1-A elbaT ¡ ¢ .SRC yb delipmoc elbaT :ecruoS .snoitcnas )RD-ATFAC sa nwonk( ro/dna senif mumixam rewol a htiw serudecorp tnemelttes cilbupeR nacinimoD etupsid tnereffid emos evah snoisivorp )tnemnorivne dna( robaL eht dna aciremA lartneC : S E R U D E C O RP T N E M E L T T ES E T U P S ID namO .tnemecrofne taht niarhaB ni noitercsid esicrexe ot thgir eht niater tub ;seitraP eht neewteb occoroM edart gnitceffa rennam a ni ,noitcani ro noitca fo esruoc gnirrucer ro ailartsuA deniatsus a hguorht ,swal nwo rieht ecrofne ot liaf ot ton ot eergA .1 eropagniS :seitrap llA :SI SERUDECORP TNEMELTTES elihC E T U P S I D R E D N U E L B A E C R O F N E S I T A H T N O I S I V O RP R O B AL Y L N O E H T :htiw 2002 :TNEMEERGA EHT FO YDOB eht nI stnemeergA edarT eerF fo tcA edarT .yllauqe snoisivorp tnemeerga lla ot ylppa serudecorp emas ehT : S E R U D E C O RP T N E M E L T T ES E T U P S I D .sdradnats robal evorpmi ot seitinutroppo decnahne sedivorp meht neewteb noitarepooc taht ezingoceR .5 .sdradnats robal eroc fo noitinifed .S.U eht htiw tnetsisnoc era swal esoht taht erusne ot evirts ot dna ;ylgnidrocca snoitaluger dna swal robal sti yfidom ro tpoda dna sdradnats robal nwo sti hsilbatse ot ytrap rehto eht fo thgir eht ezingoceR .4 ;ytrap rehto eht htiw edart egaruocne ot redro ni swal hcus morf etagored ro eviaw ton od yeht erusne ot evirts seitrap eht ,eroferehT .swal robal citsemod gnixaler yb edart egaruocne ot etairporppani si ti taht ezingoceR .3 ;wal citsemod yb detcetorp dna dezingocer era "sthgir rekrow dezingocer yllanoitanretni" dna selpicnirp robal eseht taht erusne ot evirts dna )OLI( noitazinagrO robaL lanoitanretnI eht rednu snoitagilbo mriffaeR .2 ;tnemecrofne taht ni noitercsid esicrexe ot thgir eht niater tub ;seitraP eht neewteb edart gnitceffa rennam a ni ,noitcani ro noitca fo esruoc gnirrucer ro deniatsus a hguorht ,swal nwo rieht ecrofne ot liaf ot ton ot eergA .1 :seitraP :SNOISIVORP ROBAL ).snoitcnas ot gnitroser tuohtiw setupsid laitnetop yna evloser ot deerga stnemnrevog nainadroJ dna .S.U eht neewteb srettel fo egnahcxe na hguohtla ;elbaecrofne era snoisivorp lla yllacinhceT( ytirohtuA :TNEMEERGA EHT FO YDOB eht nI nadroJ SAPT oN .flesti tnemeerga eht ni era naht seitlanep mumixam rewol htiw serudecorp tnemelttes etupsid nwo sti sah tnemeerga edis robal ehT : S E R U D E C O RP T N E M E L T T ES E T U P S I D .swal robal dezingocer-yllautum yb derevoc dna detaler-edart si noitaloiv eht erehw htlaeh dna ytefas lanoitapucco ro ,egaw muminim ,robal dlihc ot gnitaler swal nwo sti ecrofne )ATFAN( ot eruliaf s'ytrap a rof si noisivorp robal elbaecrofne ylno ehT tnemeergA edarT 8891 fo tcA :TNEMEERGA EDIS ROBAL nI eerF naciremA htroN edarT subinmO noitacoL riehT dna snoisivorP robaL elbaecrofnE yrtnuoC rentraP ytirohtuA ro tnemeergA kcarT edarT eerF -tsaF/APT swaL kcarT-tsaF/APT suoiraV rednu detaitogeN sATF ni snoisivorP robaL yeK .2-A elbaT ¢ mjbolle@crs.loc.gov, 7-7753 Specialist in International Trade and Finance Mary Jane Bolle .SRC yb delipmoc elbaT :ecruoS .stnemeerga ... lla ot seilppa taht serudecorp fo tes dna msinahcem tnemelttes etupsid suoitidepxe dna evitceffe elgnis a rof edivorp oT )7( E R U D E C O RP T N E M E L T T ES E T U P S ID .OLI eht yb edam snoitadnemmocer fo ecnarehtruf ni dna htiw tnetsisnoc nekat snoitca rof dna ;robal dlihc yb decudorp stcudorp dna robal evals ro nosirp yb decudorp stcudorp rof stnemeerga ... eht rednu snoitagilbo morf snoitpecxe etaerc oT )6( dna ;sdradnats robal eroc ot ecnerehda fo weiver raluger rof edivorp oT )5( ;sdradnats robal eroc fo tnemecrofne dna ecnerehda evorpmi ot ]seitraP[ depoleved tsael rof sevitnecni ssecca tekram rof stnemtimmoc dna snoitaluger dna swal robal rieht gninehtgnerts ni ]seitraP[ ot ecnatsissa lacinhcet dna ecnadiug edivorp ot margorp krow a etaerc oT )4( ;stnemeerga rehto ni desu smsinahcem ot elbarapmoc seirtnuoc depoleved-tsael rof ecnailpmoc ni-desahp rof edivorp oT )3( .evoba )1( ni deifitnedi sdradnats robal eroc eht htiw tnetsisnoc 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snoitibihorp dna ,ylevitcelloc niagrab ot thgir eht ,noitaicossa fo thgir eht :sdradnats robal eroc gniwollof )1002 fo tcA eht fo tnemecrofne dna noitpoda eht rof edivorp taht selur elbaecrofne edulcni oT )1( ytirohtuA gnitaitogeN edarT evisneherpmoC( :STNEMEERGA EDART LARETALIB ROF SEVITCEJBO GNITAITOGEN LAPICNIRP .)1()d(2 .ceS 9103 .R.H snoisivorP robaL elbaecrofnE ytirohtuA kcarT-tsaF/APT )ssergnoC ht701 ,legnaR( 9103 .R.H ni dedulcnI snoisivorP robaL elbaecrofnE . 3-A elbaT ¢ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RL33864